Sauntering the other day in the Utah State University library brought us a book on the history of ballooning, in which is a report from The Edinburgh Advertiser, September 24, 1784, of an early manned balloon flight. As we read, we were longing for the simpler times:
The outcries of the peasants invited us to return; I maneuvered in consequence, and we accosted them at about the height of one hundred feet. Some were clapping their hands together, others kneeling, and the greater part of them running away terrified. The most courageous contemplated us, and exclaimed, “Are you men or gods? - What are you? - Make yourselves known!” We replied, we are men like you, and here is a proof of it. We took off our coats, and threw them down; they seized upon them eagerly, and began to divide them in pieces.
(Quoted from Ballooning: A History, 1782 - 1900, by S. L. Kotar and J. E. Gessler. Mcfarland & Co., 2011.)
For S. L. Kotar on Linkedin, click here.
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